Former Cuban Prisoner Rights Violations Remain

Armando Valladares is the author of Against All Hope, about the 22 years
he spent as a prisoner in Castro’s gulags.
Despite renewed ties with the U.S.

Many of the Damas de Blanco—Cuba’s infamous wives, mothers and daughters
of jailed political dissidents—were recently detained on their way to
Sunday Mass with their families. But you likely didn’t read about these
arrests in the American news media. You were much more likely to have
read about the first Carnival cruise ship to sail from the U.S. to Cuba.
Coverage of the “historic voyage” featured photos of Carnival executives
clinking champagne and waiving miniature American and Cuban flags and
images of happy Cubans lining the shores of Havana alongside gleaming
antique cars. Never mind that Cuba initially refused passage to
Cuban-born Americans.

Despite direct flights to Havana and even a historic presidential visit
in April, human-rights violations in Cuba remain serious. Just weeks
before Carnival’s maiden voyage to Cuba, hundreds of government workers
in eastern Cuba surrounded and demolished the Strong Winds Ministry
Church of Las Trunas and threatened to throw its pastor, Reverend Mario
Jorge Travieso, in jail for seven years if he said a word about it. The
church’s crime? Failure to register with the government. Strong Winds
was the fourth church to be destroyed by the government in 2016.

The Cuban government is especially good at violating the human rights of
its people, and then labeling the victims as the criminals. I spent 22
years in Catro’s gulags for the simple crime of refusing to place a sign
on my desk that read: “I’m with Fidel.” I lost 22 years of my life, and
countless friends and family, for that sin against the regime. I spent
eight of those years naked, when I refused to wear the prison uniform of
a criminal. Of his treatment at the hands of the Cuban authorities,
after they had destroyed his church and the house of worship for many
more, Rev. Travieso said he was made to feel “like a common delinquent.”

Despite backslaps between Raul Castro and President Barack Obama and
vacationers packing their bags for Cuban beaches, my jailers are still
in their back-alley business of rounding up everyday citizens, violating
their most basic human rights, and then slapping them with the label
“criminal.” Last year, the number of documented political arrests was
almost as high in just one month as it was in the entire year of 2010.
Hostility to religion is especially enflamed, with one human rights
group counting 2,000 churches marked as “illegal” by the government last
year, 100 of them slated for the same fate as that of Rev. Travieso’s.
That group found a nearly 1,000% increase in overall religious liberty
violations from 2014 to 2015.

Just ask Alan Gross, the American who was captured working covertly in
Cuba to help the small Jewish community gain access to better Internet
services. He returned to the U.S. after five years, missing teeth,
weighing 100 pounds less, hardly able to walk due to the pain from
chronic abuse, and barely able to see from one eye. That is Cuban price
tag for working peacefully for religious liberty.

The Castro regime has long loathed religion, because God is their
biggest competition when it comes to rights. How can rights come from
Fidel, and now Raul, when there is someone much bigger and greater than
they? And how can they seize those rights on a totalitarian whim, when
they were never the bestower of rights in the first place? Any dictator
knows it’s hard work to compete with God. So the solution is to crush
God from civil society.

As Supreme Court Justices Elena Kagan and Justice Samuel Alito recently
wrote in a joint opinion uniting the two poles of the Court in a major
religious liberty ruling: “religious institutions act as critical
buffers between the individual and the power of the state.”

And so it follows that an all-powerful state would be hard at work
destroying those buffers, one church foundation at a time. And when the
buffer can’t be destroyed, focus on the individual, one Dama at a time.

And so if Carnival would like to take its passengers to see “the real
Cuba,” as it advertises, they might stopover in Las Trunas and visit the
rubble of what was once Rev. Travieso’s church. That should provide some
authentic flavor to the trip.

By continuing to use the site, you agree to the use of cookies. more information

The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.